Subject:
[adventure!] speculation
Date:
1/7/2004 1:54:29 PM
So, I need to say a couple of things about Morocco with my
hindsight glasses
on. Just let me put on these rose-coloured side mirrors ...
ahh, perfect.
One thing I´ve noticed, even after only a couple of weeks of
travelling, is
that I really want a hug. First I should say this isn´t a
gimme-some-sympathy email. I may eventually get to some kind
of point.
So, I´ve been whining to you about the poor hygiene
standards in Morocco,
like an annoyingly Western please-seal-my-food-in-plastic
kind of traveller.
I´m sure you´ve all loved hearing me complain. What I found
interesting,
and surprising, is that people in Morocco don´t seem to be
sick nearly as
often as you might think, given the amount of
germ-exchanging that goes on.
The germ-exchanging process involves things like handling
meat, money,
bread, and everything else with the same hands used to blow
your nose and
´wipe´ (with water - Moroccan people don´t use kleenex or
toilet paper).
There´s also no soap in any of the bathrooms, which doesn´t
seem to matter
because noone seems to use the sinks.
But the other method of germ-exchanging, the one that is
relevant to this
email, is general human touch. If you didn´t know better
when you arrived
in Morocco, you´d think it was the gay capital of the world.
The men walk
around holding hands, and it´s not uncommon to see two guys
sensually
holding and kissing eachother´s faces. And there´s tons of
hugging. Among
women it´s less flamboyant, but there is still a lot of
physical contact.
Interestingly, you will almost never see any contact between
men and women.
I mentioned in an earlier email that I had a cold. I got
sick 3 weeks ago
today and this cold is still lingering. I have been blaming
it on the
Moroccan hygiene and the call to prayer that kept waking me
up.
I´m reading a book right now called ´Much depends on Dinner´
by Margaret
Visser. It´s a very good (if a little dense) explanation of
the history,
sociology and mythology behind different food items. One of
these items
(the chapter I was reading a couple of nights ago) is about
chickens. She
talks about the first chickens to be domesticated,
cock-fighting, the role
of hens and roosters in ancient cultures, etc. She also
talks about factory
farming, and at one point mentions the research that finds a
relationship
between stress and the immune systems of chickens. In the
study, people
yelled at some chickens and subjected them to various
stressors, and they
treated some other chickens nicely, singing to them and
petting them. As
you have already guessed, the chickens who were petted had
increased
resistance to infections.
The chicken research is old (the book was published in the
mid-80´s, and the
research was probably not new then), and it´s been explored
in various ways
with humans since then. But it was interesting to think
about that in the
context of Morocco. Here you have people living in
conditions that should
you might think would result in plenty of illness, but (as
far as I could
tell) the people are no more sick than in North America.
In North America, we´ve got super-ridiculous hygiene, and
every kid learns
about germs, etc., but what we don´t have is nearly as much
human contact.
I mean, you can hug your friends, but the kind of greetings
you see in
Morocco would be considered very strange behaviour at home.
Being in beautiful Morocco, with it´s friendly people and
fertile soil, you
just can´t help but think that the main thing lacking is
their education
system. But maybe if we´re going to teach Moroccan children
to wash their
hands, we should teach North American kids to hug eachother.
We´d all be
better off.
I´m in Spain now, where you can find people (couples)
groping eachother
anywhere you look. They´re very touchy people here. Of
course, everyone in
Spain is required to chain-smoke, so they better get as much
human contact
as possible.
One more thing to tell you about Morocco is that there
appears to be almost
zero crime. I´m not sure whether it´s got to do with the
fact that there
are 5 daily reminders that their god is watching them, or
whether it´s that
the sheer amount of hashish keeps people from acting up, but
something makes
these people extremely peaceful.
Sorry this is such a long email, but I have to tell you two
things about my
return to Spain last night.
First, the border between Spain and Morocco (in Africa
between the Spanish
settlement of Cueta and the Moroccan town of Fnideq) is a
very strange
sight. Basically it´s a muddy road with some booths, fences,
lots of cops,
and tons of razor wire.